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  2. How To Get Rid Of Ants In Your House Once And For All - AOL

    www.aol.com/rid-ants-house-once-192639861.html

    How To Prevent Ant Infestations. Ants are tiny so that it’s nearly impossible to keep them out of your house, says Bertone. But these tips can help: · Remove thick mulch up against your home, ...

  3. Get rid of ants in your NC home: Pesticides and intervention ...

    www.aol.com/rid-ants-nc-home-pesticides...

    Sugar bait with a toxicant, such as boric acid, typically works well, since many ant species that enter homes are sweet-loving ants. This will work slowly as foraging ants take food back to the queen.

  4. Here's How to Get Rid of Ants in Your Home and Yard for Good

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/rid-ants-home-good...

    “They never stop searching for food, day and night.” If you see a single ant meandering around by itself, she’s looking for food (interestingly, all the ants you see out exploring are females!).

  5. Iridomyrmex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iridomyrmex

    The ants counter this by preventing meat ants from leaving their nest by blocking their nesting holes with debris, a behaviour known as nest-plugging. [70] [71] If meat ant nests are encroached by trees or other shade, banded sugar ants may invade and take over the nest, since the health of the colony may deteriorate from overshadowing. [72]

  6. Ant-keeping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ant-keeping

    A formicarium, which is a housing for an ant colony. Note the talcum powder/rubbing alcohol lubricant mixture applied around the top perimeter of the enclosure, to prevent ants from escaping. Ant-keeping (or ant keeping) is a hobby involving the capture, care, and observation of ants and ant colonies. [1] It is a form of lay myrmecology. The ...

  7. Tetramorium immigrans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetramorium_immigrans

    Diagram of the pavement ant. (a = queen; b = queen after loss of wings; c = male, d = worker, e = larva; g = pupa; f = head of larva more highly magnified) Tetramorium immigrans —also known as the immigrant pavement ant , pavement ant , [ note 1 ] and the sugar ant in parts of North America [ 1 ] [ note 2 ] —is an ant native to Europe ...